McAfee Labs and The International Spy Museum

Surrounded by a network of neon lights across the ceiling, walls of computer screens lit with grave headlines regarding our country’s digital dependence – drinking water, sewer systems, banks, government systems, all vulnerable to an electrical grid outage – I introduced my wife and my sixteen-year-old daughter to our latest McAfee endeavor, exhibit contributor in [...]

Surrounded by a network of neon lights across the ceiling, walls of computer screens lit with grave headlines regarding our country’s digital dependence – drinking water, sewer systems, banks, government systems, all vulnerable to an electrical grid outage – I introduced my wife and my sixteen-year-old daughter to our latest McAfee endeavor, exhibit contributor in the new International Spy Museum exhibit “Weapons of Mass Disruption.”

Yes, you read that correctly. Your humble narrator is part of a museum exhibit.

Nestled on the corner of 8th and F streets in Washington, D.C., the International Spy Museum has become a must see in our nation’s capital. It speaks to our country’s tales of espionage and the ultimate currency, intelligence. Never has a place been better suited to educate its visitors of the cybersecurity threats facing our government, our businesses and yes, you and me.

As former national intelligence director Admiral Michael McConnell mentioned during the exhibit’s opening event a week or so ago, the Internet has created an unprecedented level of vulnerability.

These threats, which could bowl you over in their magnitude and frequency, are constantly evolving, morphing into ever-changing but equally lethal pieces of malware – as diverse and fluid as Web 2.0 itself. In that stuff is our office, littered with Red Bull and Twinkies, where myself and many other McAfee Labs researchers garner an understanding of the dark side of cyberspace activity. You know the saying. Keep your friends close but your enemies closer. It is this perspective and insight which yields information on breaking threats and a more holistic understanding of the black hatted enemy.

So consider again the computer wall’s grave headlines in the exhibit…. “The Pentagon’s IT system is probed 360 million times of day. Twitter crashed as a result of a denial of service attack against a Georgian proponent. Is our air traffic control system protected?”

The exhibit shouts the theme we as an industry live and that I shared during my contribution interview. The threat is real. Dare I say, even my sixteen-year-old got a kick out of it.


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Written on Tuesday, 13 October 2009 00:17 by GSO

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